Well, I recently came to an interesting realization when digging out my old Marantz SS amp and hooking up some of my Klipsch speakers. The S.E.X. amp's 2W output doesn't seem to be the problem, and perhaps the high Z-out isn't either. Listening carefully, I noticed that the S.E.X. bass frequencies (really, anything from 100Hz downward) are what is "running out of steam" at 50-100% volume, which is causing my speakers to sound thin and tipped-up in the higher midrange and treble. Mid and high frequencies are LOUD at 2W, even on a pair of 92dB speakers I have (due to the wood floors, probably). It's the lower stuff that sounds feeble, which causes me to want to turn up the volume knob.
While my old Marantz (1060b) claims a damping factor of 20, I think the fact that it seems pretty flat down to 20 or 30Hz is what balances out the sound more so than any improvement from better woofer control. If impedance matching were the sole issue, I'd be getting boomy, flabby bass, not a reduction in anything below 80 or 90Hz. I seem to recall Doc saying that the Specos start to roll off around 100Hz and hit their -3dB point around 50Hz (and I think that was at 1W output, not the core-saturating, pot-all-the-way-open levels I tried).
In short, I now understand why the MQ upgrade is so recommended! It sounds like better irons and coupling caps may balance out the sound on my current speakers, requiring less volume. I'm therefore going to invest there first before throwing out my current speakers (or demoting the S.E.X. to pre-amp status). It's funny how much you learn by going through this process - I didn't understand how C4S boards could possibly improve the stock S.E.X. until installing them, and up to now, I never bothered to think about the limitations of cheap OPT's at lower frequencies.